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Transcript
Productivity Perspectives
depend on your point of view
Eric Bartelsman
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Tinbergen
Institute
Canberra, ABS/PC Dec. 9, 2004
Overview
 Recent
Evidence on Productivity
 Who Cares about Productivity? Why?
 Integrating the Evidence
 What do we really know? (What will we tell
policy makers?)
 Research Agenda
Recent Evidence
 Growth Accounting
 Contribution
of ICT, other capital, MFP
 Sectoral, cross-country, timeseries
 Econometric
Estimates
 Cross-country
convergence (million regressions)
 Sectoral and micro-level datasets
Growth Accounting
1995-2000: contribution in pct-points to average annual growth
Labor
Productivity
Growth
ICT
Other
Capital
TFP
US
EU
NL
AUS
1.9
1.4
1.1
3.2
.7
.4
.6
1.2
.3
.5
.1
.4
.8
.5
.5
1.6
Source: van Ark & O’Mahony, Parham (AUS)
Growth Accounting
 Only
factors that are explicitly purchased can
contribute to output in the framework
 no
theory for role of spillovers or policy environment
 Representative
 perfect
firm makes optimizing decisions
competition is assumed
 Contribution
of quality of capital or labor can be
computed
 no
 But:
account of source of higher quality
most of output growth is accounted for
Sectoral Comparisons
1995-2002: contribution in pct-points to average annual growth
Labor
Productivity
ICTProducing
ICT-Using
Other
US
EU
NL
2.2
.7
.8
.6
.5
.2
1.3
.3
.3
.3
.0
.3
Source: van Ark & O’Mahony
Convergence in Levels
GDP per hour
relative to USA
1.20
1.00
0.80
0.60
0.40
0.20
4 67 70 73 76 79 82 85 88 91 94 97 00 03
6
19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 20 20
AUS
Source: GGDC, Groningen
FRA
JAP
NLD
UK
Convergence
 What
drives convergence process?
 Many
factors are significant in cross-country growth
regressions
 Do
we really know if 10% above or below is
significant
 international price
comparisons
 definitions of output and input
Sectoral and micro data
 Econometric
evidence in panel data setting
 R&D
 R&D
output elasticities
 Shifting of R&D based on tax-incentives
 Spillover benefits of R&D done abroad
 ICT
 Firm-level evidence on return to ICT investment
 Many other studies: trade-openess, competition, schooling
Overview
 Recent
Evidence on Productivity
 Who Cares about Productivity? Why?
 Integrating the Evidence
 What do we really know? (What will we tell
policy makers?)
 Research Agenda
Who cares about Productivity?
 Central
Banks
 productivity
levels
 used for computing potential GDP
 productivity growth rates
 monitor cycle. Used in hours-to-output models
 Economic
Policy Makers
 Comparisons
across countries: measures of wellbeing
 Comparisons across countries/over time: targets for policy
ambition (ie EU ‘Lisbon’)
 Extremely useful for Policy Evaluation
Why?
 Innovation/R&D
policy: how much to spend, where,
and in what manner.
 Education: total budget and allocation across types of
students/workers
 Trade: effects of imported materials; effects of
international specialisation
 Competition policy: effects of concentration;
deregulation
 Framework conditions: which regulations to tackle
first; how do they affect productivity
Overview
 Recent
Evidence on Productivity
 Who Cares about Productivity? Why?
 Integrating the Evidence
 What do we really know? (What will we tell
policy makers?)
 Research Agenda
Integrating Evidence on
Productivity

Firms choose innovation strategy
– Technology frontier populated by innovating firms
– Adopters buy latest technology, and apply it well
– Followers wait until capital can be used ‘off-the-shelf’

Firms then choose output/inputs to meet
demand
Innovate, Adopt or Follow
Innovation is highly risky and requires
knowledge and risk-funding. But, it also
requires flexibility in resources to leverage
successful ideas. Further, markets need to
respond to innovative products
 Adopters need some skilled workers and
functioning financial markets.

Innovate
vs Adopt
Cost of Innovative
Activity
R&D, Skills
Foreign
R&D, VC
X
Adopt vs
Follow
X
X
Reallocation
Flexibility in labor and
product markets
Financial Markets
X
X
X
Choice of resources
After choosing innovation strategy, firms
attempt to meet resulting market demand
 At firm level, growth accounting is valid
tool

– innovators push out frontier, if successful
– adopters have embodied technical change
– followers ‘converge’ towards previous frontier

Aggregate productivity is weighted average
of firms’ productivities
Overview
 Recent
Evidence on Productivity
 Who Cares about Productivity? Why?
 Integrating the Evidence
 What do we really know? (What will we tell
policy makers?)
 Research Agenda
What to tell policymakers?
What to tell policymakers?

Productivity growth requires:
– human capital
– flexibility in resources
– competition

Productivity and innovation are harmed by:
– targeted policies to firms/sectors/groups
– emphasis on ‘hard sciences’
– squeezing fundamental research
Overview
 Recent
Evidence on Productivity
 Who Cares about Productivity? Why?
 Integrating the Evidence
 What do we really know? (What will we tell
policy makers?)
 Research Agenda
Research Agenda

Theory
– models of heterogeneous firms in dynamic market
(Acemoglu, Klette&Kortum, Melitz&Helpman, Aghion
et al)

Statistics
–
–
–
–
longitudinal business data
linked employer-employee data
linked ‘special surveys’/policy experiments
international distributed micro-data analysis
Network
Researcher
Distributed micro data research
Policy Question
Research Design
Program Code
Publication
Metadata
Cross-country
Tables
NSOs
Network
members
Provision of metadata.
Approval of access.
Disclosure analysis
of cross-country tables.
Disclosure analysis of Publication